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Carlos Monsiváis

    This Mexican writer and journalist masterfully blends essay and chronicle, often focusing on the vibrant, chaotic pulse of Mexico City. His work is distinguished by a sharp wit, biting satire, and a dark humor that skewers the hypocrisy and narrow-mindedness of political and social elites. Through decades of prolific journalistic output, he captured the essence of public life, offering readers a unique and often irreverent lens through which to view Mexican society. His writings provide a critical yet entertaining commentary on the human condition.

    Carlos Monsiváis
    Obřady chaosu
    Las esencias viajeras
    Mexican Postcards
    • 1997

      Mexican Postcards

      • 228 pages
      • 8 hours of reading
      3.8(33)Add rating

      Carlos Monsiváis is one of Latin America’s most prescient and prolific social commentators. In this, the first English translation of his work, he presents an extraordinary chronicle of contemporary life south of the Rio Grande, which ranges over pop music, Latino hip hop, film stars such as Cantinflas and Dolores del Rio, the writer Juan Rulfo, life on the border with the United States, boleros and melodrama.Monsiváis’s chronicles are theoretically informed but are crammed with people rather than abstractions. They make points of deadly seriousness in a voice which is laconic, satirical and humorous, and which is often written in the register of his subjects. Monsiváis draws on a deep understanding of Mexico’s cultural histories—popular, mass and high—and notes the fascinating ways in which they interact to transform each other. The conflicts between Mexican and North American culture and between modern and traditional ways of life are constant themes of his investigations.A dazzling mixture of reportage, narrative and biting social criticism, Mexican Postcards  is certain to establish Monsiváis’s rightful place in the pantheon of Latin America’s greatest writers.

      Mexican Postcards